From c3aeb16557f2cbb1c1218b5af7bab646e4958234 Mon Sep 17 00:00:00 2001 From: Tom Christie Date: Fri, 18 Oct 2013 09:32:04 +0100 Subject: [PATCH] Update 3-class-based-views.md --- docs/tutorial/3-class-based-views.md | 4 ++-- 1 file changed, 2 insertions(+), 2 deletions(-) diff --git a/docs/tutorial/3-class-based-views.md b/docs/tutorial/3-class-based-views.md index 67a75d9f4..b37bc31bd 100644 --- a/docs/tutorial/3-class-based-views.md +++ b/docs/tutorial/3-class-based-views.md @@ -83,7 +83,7 @@ One of the big wins of using class based views is that it allows us to easily co The create/retrieve/update/delete operations that we've been using so far are going to be pretty similar for any model-backed API views we create. Those bits of common behaviour are implemented in REST framework's mixin classes. -Let's take a look at how we can compose our `views.py` by using the mixin classes. +Let's take a look at how we can compose the views by using the mixin classes. Here's our `views.py` module again. from snippets.models import Snippet from snippets.serializers import SnippetSerializer @@ -126,7 +126,7 @@ Pretty similar. Again we're using the `GenericAPIView` class to provide the cor ## Using generic class based views -Using the mixin classes we've rewritten the views to use slightly less code than before, but we can go one step further. REST framework provides a set of already mixed-in generic views that we can use to trim down `views.py` even more. +Using the mixin classes we've rewritten the views to use slightly less code than before, but we can go one step further. REST framework provides a set of already mixed-in generic views that we can use to trim down our `views.py` module even more. from snippets.models import Snippet from snippets.serializers import SnippetSerializer